Abstract 1063P
Background
Radiological assessment of tumor response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) can be challenging. This retrospective study aimed to identify patterns of dissociated response (DR) to treatment and correlate them to clinical outcome.
Methods
We analyzed CT imaging data from 257 metastatic patients receiving ICI, who underwent imaging at baseline and on-therapy. Up to 10 lesions per organ were segmented using 3DSlicer at baseline and best response by RECIST 1.1. Changes in tumor diameter from baseline to best response were assessed. DR was defined as the co-existence of lesions with an increase and decrease in diameter (-10% / +10%, based on an internal variability study) or a decrease in diameter of one or more lesions with the appearance of new lesions.
Results
This cohort comprised 257 patients (63% male) with different tumor types including lung, melanoma, breast, colorectal and others. According to the RECIST classification 6.6% (17/257) of patients had CR, 20.2% (52/257) PR, 35.4% (91/257) SD and 37.7% (97/257) PD. DR was identified in 13% (34/257) patients at the time of best response by RECIST. 21/34 patients with DR were classified as SD or PR by RECIST1.1; their overall survival was significantly lower than SD/PR patients without DR (n=140) (median OS 11.96 vs 20.01 months, p-value <0.02). The incidence of DR was not associated with tumor type or burden of disease. A higher number of organs affected at baseline was significantly associated with presence of DR (p<0.001). Liver metastasis were a poor prognostic factor irrespective of DR (median OS 7.3 vs 15 months, p-value<0.005).
Conclusions
Dissociated responses to ICI are common across tumor types and associate with poor clinical outcome. DR probably reflects underlying intra-patients' biological heterogeneity both at the tumor and tumor micro-environment level and can be captured through individual lesion assessment in standard of care imaging.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
RPL is supported by “la Caixa” Foundation, a CRIS Foundation Talent Award (TALENT19-05), the FERO Foundation, the Instituto de Salud Carlos III-Investigación en Salud (PI18/01395 and PI21/01019) and the Prostate Cancer Foundation (18YOUN19).
Disclosure
C. Tozzi: Financial Interests, Advisory Board: VHIO. M. Vieito Villar: Non-Financial Interests, Principal Investigator: Roche, BMS, Taiho, Hutchinson Pharma, Novartis, Mundipharma, Enterome, Debiopharm. I. Braña: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Achilles Therapeutics, Bristol Myers Squibb, Cancer Expert Now, eTheRNA Immunotherapies, Merck Serono, Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD), Rakuten Pharma, Boehringer Ingellheim, PCI Biotech, Guidepoint; Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck Serono, Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD), Roche; Financial Interests, Institutional, Local PI: AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, GSK, Gliknik, Incyte, ISA pharmaceuticals, Janssen Oncology, Kura, Merck Serono, Debiopharm, Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD), Nanobiotix, Novartis, Northern Biologics, Regeneron, Pfizer, Seattle Genetics, Shattuck Labs, VCN Biosciences, Roche, Immutep, MacroGenics, Sanofi, PharmaMar, Odonate Therapeutics, Bicycle Therapeutics, Dragonfly therapeutics, Gilead; Non-Financial Interests, Principal Investigator, Basket of baskets: Cancer Core Europe; Non-Financial Interests, Member, Head and Neck Group: EORTC; Non-Financial Interests, Member: SEOM, ASCO. E. Garralda: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: Roche, Ellipses Pharma, Boehringer Ingelheim, Janssen Global Services, Seattle Genetics, Alkermes, Thermo Fisher, MabDiscovery, Anaveon, Hengrui, F-Star Therapeutics, Sanofi, Incyte; Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: MSD, Lilly, Roche, Thermo Fisher, Novartis, Seagen; Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment: NEXT Oncology; Financial Interests, Institutional, Funding: Novartis, Roche, Thermo Fisher, AstraZeneca, Taiho; Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant: BeiGene, Janssen. R. Perez Lopez: Financial Interests, Personal, Full or part-time Employment, VHIO staff (team leader of the Radiomics Group): VHIO; Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant, Co-PI of 3 research studies.: AstraZeneca; Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant, PI of a research study.: Roche. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1333P - A global phase 1b study of ORIC-114, a highly selective, brain penetrant EGFR and HER2 inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid tumors harboring EGFR Exon 20 or HER2 alterations
Presenter: Min Hee Hong
Session: Poster session 19
1334P - Activity of first line immunotherapy or chemo-immunotherapy in advanced NSCLC with SMARCA4 deficiency
Presenter: Alina Grecea
Session: Poster session 19
1335P - Phase Ib study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of osimertinib with ipilimumab in EGFRm NSCLC
Presenter: Sonam Puri
Session: Poster session 19
1336P - Small cell transformation in EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer (EGFR+ NSCLC): Efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors or tyrosine kinase inhibitors combined with platinum-based chemotherapy
Presenter: Felix Saalfeld
Session: Poster session 19
1337P - Real-world utilization and outcomes of dacomitinib as first-line therapy in Asian patients with advanced EGFR mutation–positive NSCLC: An interim analysis of the ARIA study
Presenter: Lin Wu
Session: Poster session 19
1338P - Cerebrospinal fluid pharmacokinetic study of lazertinib and pemetrexed in patients with EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer with leptomeningeal metastases: KCSG21-01 LAZARUS trial
Presenter: Bhumsuk Keam
Session: Poster session 19
1339P - Real-world experience of dacomitinib in mEGFR Advanced NSCLC: A single centre experience
Presenter: Bivas Biswas
Session: Poster session 19
1340P - Propensity score matching analysis for osimertinib versus comparator first-generation EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors as first-line treatment in patients with advanced EGFR-mutated non–small cell lung cancer: A Chinese, multicenter, real-world cohort study
Presenter: Dongming Zhang
Session: Poster session 19
1341P - Real-world molecular testing, treatment patterns and clinical outcomes in Chinese advanced NSCLC patients, who have progressed on first-line EGFR-TKI therapy (PISCES)
Presenter: Panwen Tian
Session: Poster session 19
1342P - Effect of the timing of intervention in craniocerebral radiotherapy on prognosis of patients with EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinoma with brain metastasis
Presenter: Guangchuan Deng
Session: Poster session 19